Definition
A very thin layer of air flowing smoothly along the surface of an airfoil, located within the larger boundary layer, where the airflow remains in orderly parallel sheets rather than tumbling and mixing. It exists immediately adjacent to the wing surface and is the slowest-moving portion of the boundary layer.
Plain English
A super-thin film of smooth, orderly air sliding along the wing's skin, sitting underneath the rougher, more mixed-up air just above it.
Context Anchor
Seen in aerodynamic discussions of airflow over wings and other aircraft surfaces, especially when explaining boundary layers, drag, and surface roughness.
Derivation
Laminar comes from the Latin lamina, meaning a thin sheet or plate. The word pictures the air moving in tidy parallel sheets, like a stack of paper sliding over itself. Sublayer simply means a layer beneath another layer — in this case, sitting underneath the rest of the boundary layer.
Why Pilots Care
The condition of this thin layer affects skin friction drag and how cleanly the air flows over the wing. Anything that disrupts it — frost, dirt, ice, or surface damage — increases drag and can degrade lift, which is why pilots take wing surface cleanliness so seriously before flight.
Grounding Statement
Picture air sliding over a clean wing: the air touching the surface forms a very thin smooth layer, while the air just above it may be more mixed and disturbed.
Intuition Check
Laminar sublayer does not mean the whole airflow over the wing is laminar. It means only the very thin air right next to the surface is moving smoothly.
Example Sentence 1
Even a light coating of frost can disturb the laminar sublayer over the wing and noticeably increase drag on takeoff.
Example Sentence 2
Designers consider the laminar sublayer thickness when estimating total drag on high-speed aircraft.